Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a roughly hexagonal arrangement, leaving behind an ordered colonnade. We report observations of columnar jointing in a laboratory analog system, desiccated corn starch slurries. Using measurements of moisture density, evaporation rates, and fracture advance rates as evidence, we suggest that an advective-diffusive system is responsible for the rough scaling behavior of columnar joints. This theory explains the order of magnitude difference in scales between jointing in lavas and in starches. We investigated the scaling of average columnar cross-sectional areas due to the evaporation rate, the analog of the cooling rate of igneous columnar join...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
AbstractThe remarkable regularity of the rock columns outlined by the cooling related contraction jo...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Columnar joints are three-dimensional fracture networks that form in cooling basalt and several othe...
Crack patterns in laboratory experiments on thick samples of drying cornstarch are geometrically sim...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
Columnar jointing is best-known from formations in cooled lava, such as the Giant's Causeway, Devil'...
Columnar jointing is a common feature of solidified lavas, sills and dikes, but the factors controll...
International audienceMany natural fracture systems are characterized by a single length scale, whic...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Regular columnar joints that originate from networklike crack patterns can be observed in basalt and...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
AbstractThe remarkable regularity of the rock columns outlined by the cooling related contraction jo...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern common in igneous rocks in which cracks self-organize into a...
Columnar jointing is a fracture pattern, best known from locations such as the Giant's Causeway, or ...
Columnar joints are three-dimensional fracture networks that form in cooling basalt and several othe...
Crack patterns in laboratory experiments on thick samples of drying cornstarch are geometrically sim...
We describe field work, analysis, and modeling of columnar joints from the Columbia River Basalt Gro...
Columnar joints are interconnected tension fractures that divide rocks into long prismatic columns. ...
Columnar jointing is best-known from formations in cooled lava, such as the Giant's Causeway, Devil'...
Columnar jointing is a common feature of solidified lavas, sills and dikes, but the factors controll...
International audienceMany natural fracture systems are characterized by a single length scale, whic...
Columnar jointing in basaltic lava flows on the island of Staffa, NW Scotland, was studied using a c...
Regular columnar joints that originate from networklike crack patterns can be observed in basalt and...
Columnar joints form by cracking during cooling-induced contraction of lava, allowing hydrothermal f...
Columnar joints form as a brittle relaxation response to tensile stresses within cooling lava flows ...
AbstractThe remarkable regularity of the rock columns outlined by the cooling related contraction jo...